
Complete or Completed - English Language & Usage Stack …
"Complete" indicates a thing that has been finished. "Completed" is a past-tense verb form, and while by itself means much the same thing as "complete", it has the additional implication of …
Job was completed, job has completed and job has been …
'Completed' without 'has been' or 'was' implies that you care more about the status of the lawn than about the people that mowed it. If I hired a service to mow my lawn every Thursday while …
What is the difference between 'finished' and 'completed'?
Apr 16, 2015 · completed - means you've done all the parts of the relevant task finished - you have done the task as a whole, but you may have skipped some parts. Example: I have …
What is the difference between 'finished' and 'completed'?
Apr 16, 2015 · In many contexts, the meanings are pretty much the same, but you might hear finished more often than completed in casual conversation. For example: I've finished my …
present perfect - "I have completed" versus "I had completed"
Mar 11, 2015 · "I had completed all the tasks" only makes sense if there is some other event that you're relating to. Like, "I had completed all the tasks before I took my lunch break". If you …
word difference - complete or completed - English Language …
Completed; Closed; Terminated (Used most often for a bug issue or a problem) Ended/ Concluded (very vague) Out of which, the most used terms are 'Completed' and 'Closed'. For …
Which is correct: "have been completed" or "are completed"
The requested modifications have been completed. is better, because you are referring to a continuing action (you finished writing the code, but it will get tested next). Put into context: …
passive voice - "Testing complete" vs "Testing is completed"
Jun 10, 2019 · Testing has been completed The difference is that present simple is used to talk about the way things are now, and present perfect is used about something that happened in …
Should I say "Your order is now complete" or "Your order is now …
It is completed as an adjective. This is clear because it is supposed to be a discrete event that just happened. The phrase "is completed" as a passive would express a habitual action, e.g. "is …
"By when you want it completed" vs. "when you want it completed …
May 15, 2014 · There’s a difference between “I want this completed and handed in on Thursday” and “I want this completed and handed in by Thursday”. – Janus Bahs Jacquet Commented …